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Albino Pérez was a native of Veracruz, Mexico. [2] Pérez was a distinguished army colonel from central Mexico. He was appointed Governor of New Mexico by President Antonio López de Santa Anna in 1835, under the new centralized form of government. [1] He succeeded Francisco Sarracino as civilian governor and Captain Blas de Hinojos as ...
José María Angél González was the governor of the independent Junta Popular during New Mexico’s Río Arriba Rebellion in 1837. González, sometimes spelled Gonzáles, was a Taos Pueblo Indian who led the Junta Popular or Cantón, which was the most ethnically inclusive government in the history of New Mexico.
The secretary of state is in effect the guarantor of the continuity and stability of good government in New Mexico, with his or her role extending to the enforcement of elections and government ethics laws, the certification, filing, and preservation of legislation, gubernatorial acts, and other instruments vital to the efficient operation of state government, and the registration and ...
Nov. 15—In an effort to avert another New Mexico county refusing to certify election results, Attorney General Hector Balderas and Secretary of State Maggie Toulouse Oliver issued a joint ...
Speaker Term Party County/Residence Notes Citation Theodore D. Wheaton: 1851–1854 Taos [3] [4]Facundo Pino: 1854–1855 [4]Celedonio Valdés: 1855–1856
New Mexico Secretary of State Maggie Toulouse Oliver has asked the state Supreme Court to order a GOP county commission to certify primary election results
Sep. 11—New Mexico's Maggie Toulouse Oliver was one of six secretaries of state who testified before a congressional committee Wednesday in Washington about the challenges of maintaining voter ...
Santiago Abréu (died 8 August 1837) was governor of Santa Fe de Nuevo México (New Mexico) from 1832 to 1833. [1] He was a victim of the Chimayó Rebellion of 1837. He was dismembered before being allowed to die. [2] Santiago Abreú was deputy to the Congress in Mexico City from 1825 to 1826, and was appointed governor in 1832–33. [3]